Tre Hjorter

Holm House
Tre Hjorter
General information
Location Copenhagen
Country Denmark
Coordinates 55°40′40.13″N 12°34′13.13″E / 55.6778139°N 12.5703139°E / 55.6778139; 12.5703139Coordinates: 55°40′40.13″N 12°34′13.13″E / 55.6778139°N 12.5703139°E / 55.6778139; 12.5703139
Completed 1797
Client Hinrich Ladiges

Tre Hjorter is a former hotel located on the corner of Vestergade (No. 12) and Æarsbjørnstræde in the Latin Quarter of central Copenhagen, Denmark. It now houses a bar in the ground floor. The building was listed on the Danish registry of protected buildings and places in 1939.

History

The Tre Hjorter building seen on a lithography from c. 1750

Erik Valkendorff, a relative of later stadtholder Christoffer Valkendorf, acquired a property at the site in the middle of the 16th century. In 1681, his dedendents sold it to a blacksmith, Jochum Pedersen, who sold off the land in lots. The corner lot was acquired by an innkeeper, Søren Rasmussen Hjortshøy, who opened a hotel at the site. Its name, De Tre Hjorter, thus contained a reference to his own last name. The hotel was one of many located on the north side of the street, a tradition that dated from a time when the Western City Gate was located at the end of Vestergade.[1]

Drawing from the courtyard

It was used by farmers who came into town on market day to sell their produce. The hotel was also frequented by young theologians from the provinces who had come to Copenhagen with the ambition to get employment at one of the city's churches. In the 1720s, this resulted in a scandal that involved Tre Hjorter's owners, Peter and Ane Sørensen Berg.Ane claimed to have connections in the right circles and operated a lucrative business conveying bribes that were supposed to improve the aspiring priests' chances. In 1725, Ane was arrested and sentenced to time in the notonious Spinning House in Christianshavn while her husband was thrown out of Copenhagen. She was, however, pardoned the following year but also thrown out of the city.[1]

A few years later, Tre Hjorter was completely destroyed in the Copenhagen Fire of 1728 but was rebuilt. A 15-year-old C. E. F. Weyse stayed at Tre Hjorter when he first came to Vopenhagen from Altona and resided there until the composer Abraham Peter Schultz offered him accommodation in his apartment in Bredgade.[2]

Photograph of the building by Johannes Hauerslev

In 1795, Hotel Tre Hjorter was once again lost to the flames in the Second Great Fire. Its owner, Jørgen Sorterup, commissioned Lauritz Laurberg Thrane to rebuilt his hotel. Construction started the following year and was competed in 1797. The mail coachs for destinations on Zealand began to use the complex as a terminus. The mail coaches entered the courtyard to the rear of the hotel through a gateway at Vestergade 12 and departed via a gateway at Larsbjørnstræde 10. The courtyard contained stables, warehouses and a post office.

The mail coaches disappeared when the new railway station opened in 1847. The old hostels in Vestergade were also faced with new competition when several large, modern hotels opened around the corner on Vester Voldgade in the 1880s and 1890s. Hotel Tre Hjorter was the only hotel left in Vestergade by the time that it closed in 1929.

All the buildings in the courtyard were demolished in 1939 and replaced by modern fourstorey building. The tenants in the new building included a photographer, an importer a men's hats, a manufacturer of blinds and a book printer.[2]

Today

Tyrolia Bier Klub, a bar owned by Rekon Group, is located in the ground floor. The premises has previously housed the bars Woodstock og Frøken Nielsen.[3]

Cultural references

Tre Kroner is mentioned in Ludvig Holberg's comedy Den Ellevte Juni )11 June).[4]

References

  1. 1 2 "Da diligencen kom til Vestergade". Jyllands-Posten. Retrieved 24 March 2018.
  2. 1 2 "Vestergade 12". pisseranden.dk. Retrieved 24 March 2018.
  3. "Tyrolia Bier Klub". aok.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 24 March 2018.
  4. "Kjøbenhavn paa Holbergs Tid". eremit.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 24 March 2018.
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